Bid to grant MSC 'ecolabel' to bluefin tuna fishery raises fears for ‘king of fish’ 
By Karen McVeigh US Source: the guardian 6/1/2020
Karen McVeigh
Credit: Pablo Blázquez Domínguez/Getty
A decade ago, the highly prized “king of fish”, the bluefin tuna, was taken off menus in high-end restaurants and shunned by top chefs, amid warnings by environmentalists that it was being driven to extinction. Recent assessments of eastern Atlantic bluefin tuna, which can grow to the size of a small car and live for up to 40 years, have shown much healthier populations.

But now conservationists and scientists are warning that the largest and most valuable tuna species could once again be under threat if a Japanese bluefin fishery in the eastern Atlantic Ocean is awarded an internationally recognised “ecolabel” they claim is based on flawed science.
 

On Monday 1 June, an independent judge will hear evidence from the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and the Pew Charitable Trusts, the Japanese fishery and assessors for the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC), to help determine whether the assessors were right to recommend the fishery receives its label. If approved, the Japanese company Usufuku Honten can sell the first ever MSC-certified bluefin tuna to consumers, marking it as a well-managed sustainable fishery.

WWF and Pew will argue strongly against the award, saying it is too early to declare that the bluefin tuna stock is fully recovered. They have identified a “number of shortfalls” in the assessment process and say there has been a lack of impartiality.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
5051Цимлянское водохранилище рекордно обмелелоРидус2020-10-19RU
5052'I had no idea how touching it would be': how a fishing show put men's health in focusthe guardian2020-10-02UK
5053Cod crisis: stocks of Europe's most popular white fish collapsingeuronews2020-09-01CA
5054Two Missouri men charged for illegal hand fishing at Lake of the Ozarksfox2now2020-10-05US
5055A Rare Salmon Type Is in the Crosshairs of Alaska’s Proposed Pebble Minehakai magazine2020-08-27US
5056The surprising popularity of carp fishing in Texasclick2houston2020-10-02US
5057Man Catches New State Record 69.9 Pound Flathead Catfish In Santa Rosa Countynorth escambia2020-09-01CA
5058Woman gets pulled underwater, bitten by ‘muskie’ fish in Ontario lakegrunt stuff2020-10-04CA
5059Big Water boatingMiner && News2020-07-05CA
5060'Has anyone lost a fish?': Carp brought back to life after neighbour finds it on the pavement in Leighmanchester evening news2020-10-01UK
5061Indonesia’s new intelligence hub wields data in the war on illegal fishingmonga bay2020-09-29IN
5062Caught in pandemic's net, fish sellers struggle to stay afloatdeccan herald2020-09-28IN
5063Angler’s use of Ooshies to catch fish stirs controversyusa today2020-09-30US
5064The perfect fishing hole! Moment teenager somehow catches a fish with his bare hands in Alaska lakedaily mail2020-10-09UK
5065FBI intercepts illegal fish bladders sent from Mexico to ChinaRiviera Maya News2020-08-27MX
5066Electric fish ignore their own zaps with a cool trickfuturity2020-08-25CA
5067Wisconsin’s first-ever invasive carp case linked to illegal fish dealer from PlattevilleNBC2 News2020-09-22US
5068Приток реки Налычева может раскрыть тайну загрязнения на КамчаткеРидус2020-10-05RU
5069У берегов Канады поймана самая большая в мире белая акулаRG2020-10-05CA
5070Plan to use fish killer rotenone in N.B. lake, river delayed by environmental assessmentCBC News2020-09-22CA
5071Researchers Use Robotic Fish to Explore “Behavioral Teleporting”unite2020-08-25AI
5072Small scale: scientists study fish for clues about how humans spot tiny detailsaop2020-09-25UK
5073Utah men convicted of cheating in bass fishing tournamentthe ridgefield press2020-09-22US
5074Mum's warning after son's foot turns blue after standing on poisonous fish at Lincolnshire beachlincolnshirelive2020-08-24UK
5075Nevada dam changes give rare trout new life 115 years laterThe Associated Press2020-10-04US

219 220 221 202 of [222 - pages.]